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1919 Polish parliamentary election

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FieldValue
countrySecond Polish Republic
flag_year1919
next_election1922
seats_for_electionAll 394 seats in Legislative Sejm
majority_seats198
election_date
first_electionyes
leader1Wojciech Korfanty
party1Popular National Union
seats1140
percentage128.96
leader2Błażej Stolarski
party2Polish People's Party "Wyzwolenie"
last_election2new
seats259
percentage215.05
leader3Izaak Grünbaum
party3ŻRN
color3#9A535B
last_election3New
seats311
percentage310.80
leader4Ignacy Daszyński
party4Polish Socialist Party
last_election4New
seats435
percentage49.23
leader5Wincenty Witos
party5Polish People's Party "Piast" (1913–1931)
last_election5New
seats546
percentage54.17
leader6
party6Polish People's Union
last_election6New
seats635
percentage63.80
leader7
party7Polish People's Party "Left"
last_election7New
seats712
percentage73.54
leader8
party8Catholic People's Party (Poland)
last_election8New
seats818
percentage81.83
leader9
party9German lists
color9black
last_election9New
seats92
percentage91.73
leader10
party10National Workers' Union (Poland)
last_election10New
seats1032
percentage101.21
leader11
party11Independents
last_election11New
seats114
percentage1115.47
map[[File:1919 Polish Election.png400px]]
map_captionResults by constituency
titlePresident of Ministers
before_electionIgnacy Jan Paderewski
before_partyIndependent politician
after_electionIgnacy Jan Paderewski
after_partyIndependent politician

Parliamentary elections were held in Poland on 26 January 1919, electing the first Sejm of the Second Polish Republic. The elections, based on universal suffrage and proportional representation, was the first free election in the country's history. It produced a parliament balanced between the right, left and centre, although the elections were boycotted by the Polish communists and the Jewish Bund. In the territories where the election took place, voter turnout was from 70% to 90%. Right-wing parties won 50% of votes, left-wing parties around 30%, and Jewish organisations more than 10%.

Background

In 1919, the borders of the newly restored Polish state were not yet established. As a result, the government of Poland led by Jozef Pilsudski had problems creating the electoral districts. Upon a decree, signed by Pilsudski on 28 November 1918, Poland was divided into several districts, some of whom were not even part of the country. The list of these districts presents a declaration of Polish territorial claims rather than real situation of late 1918. It covers the whole territory of the Kingdom of Poland (1916–1918), formerly Russian Belostok Oblast, as well as whole former Austrian province of Galicia, even though its eastern part was area of a conflict between Poles and Ukrainians (see Polish–Ukrainian War).

The situation was even more complicated in the West, in territories which had belonged to the German Empire. Polish legislators created there several electoral districts, even in lands that never became part of the Second Polish Republic. Thus, apart from districts of Poznań, Toruń, Kartuzy, Katowice, and Gostyń, the government stipulated creation of districts in such locations, as Bytom (Beuthen), Nysa, Złotów (Flatow), Gdańsk (Danzig), and Olsztyn (Allenstein). The 1919 election was not organised in these areas, as they remained part of Germany until 1945.

Furthermore, Polish legislators wanted the election to be organised in whole Cieszyn Silesia (see also Trans-Olza). Therefore, districts were created there in Cieszyn and Frýdek-Místek. Also, the Nowy Targ district covered several communes of Orawa, and Spisz, with such towns, as Kežmarok, Stará Ľubovňa, and Spišská Nová Ves (these locations had been part of Poland until the late 18th century).

Results

Aftermath

The resulting parliament came to be known as the Legislative Sejm (Sejm Ustawodawczy). Among the first tasks of the Sejm was creation of the constitution, and the Small Constitution of 1919 was ratified ten days after the first session, on 20 February 1919. In 1921 parliament ratified the more comprehensive but also more controversial—supported by the Right, opposed by the Left—March Constitution of Poland.

References

References

  1. (31 May 2010). "Elections in Europe: A Data Handbook". Nomos.
  2. [http://kronika.sejm.gov.pl/kronika.99/text/pl/an-59.htm 80th Anniversary of inauguration of the Polish Parliament]{{dead link. (March 2018)
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